Molecular Weight Calc
The Universal Speed Limit
According to our current understanding of physics (Einstein's Theory of Special Relativity), nothing in the universe can travel faster than light in a vacuum. It is the ultimate cosmic speed limit.
This constant is denoted by the letter c (from the Latin word celeritas, meaning "swiftness"). It connects energy and mass in the famous equation E = mc².
3 × 108 m/s (or 300,000 km/s).
Light Slows Down? (Refraction)
The speed limit c applies only in a perfect Vacuum (empty space). When light travels through a material (a medium) like water or glass, it interacts with the atoms in that material, which effectively slows it down.
The measure of how much a material slows down light is called the Refractive Index (n).
The formula for the speed of light in a medium (v) is:
| Material | Refractive Index (n) | Speed (% of c) |
|---|---|---|
| Vacuum | 1.0000 | 100% |
| Air | 1.0003 | 99.97% |
| Water | 1.333 | 75% |
| Glass | ~1.50 | 66% |
| Diamond | 2.42 | 41% |
Looking into the Past
Because light takes time to travel, everything you see is actually an image from the past.
- The Moon: 1.3 seconds ago.
- The Sun: 8 minutes and 20 seconds ago. If the Sun exploded right now, we wouldn't know for 8 minutes.
- Alpha Centauri (Nearest Star): 4.3 years ago.
- Andromeda Galaxy: 2.5 million years ago.
Explore Physics
Master the math of the universe with our free tools.
🔬 Sci Notation ⚡ Kinetic Energy 🏋️ Force Calc